Page:Oklahoma Arbor and Bird Day, Friday, March Twelfth, 1909.pdf/21

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State of Oklahoma
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subsoil of a porus character than with one that is tenacious and impenetrable. Yet a careful study will show numerous species adapted to each kind of soil.

Elms, oaks and maples are to be had almost anywhere, and are easily transplanted. They are as beautiful as any trees to be found, and are in every way well adapted for the school ground. They grow on a great variety of soils, and can be easily raised from seed if young trees are not available. Every region will afford other valuable sorts, such

Mistletoe Springs, near Cement, Okla.

Courtesy Sturm's Oklahoma Magazine.

as beeches, chestnuts, walnuts, ashes, pines, or spruces. From these and such other desirable kinds as the locality affords the selection should be made.

The school ground being permanent and the need of trees continuous, for the most part long-lived trees should be used. But where the present need of trees is great, there is another side to the question. A short-lived tree grows quickly, coming into early usefulness and serves its purpose for from twenty-five to fifty years. A long-lived tree usually grows more slowly, but serves its purpose for a century or more. In many cases it is advisable to use the two kinds in